Publication:
Post-conflict Urban Renewal as an Ethnocratic Regime Practice: Racialized Governance of Redevelopment in Diyarbakir, Turkey

cris.virtual.author-orcid0000-0003-3927-2903
cris.virtualsource.author-orcid288078e6-cd5c-4be3-8c6e-7b4200761e57
dc.contributor.authorAy, Deniz
dc.contributor.authorTurker, Kaner Atakan
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-08T21:22:16Z
dc.date.available2025-01-08T21:22:16Z
dc.date.issued2022-06-20
dc.description.abstractThis paper explores the governance of a state-led urban renewal project in a politically contested area in the aftermath of a major armed conflict. Building on the ethnocratic regime theory, we explore the governance of the urban renewal process in the historic district of Suriçi by focusing on the political, spatial, and governmental underpinnings of displacement and dispossession in the context of the unresolved “Kurdish Question” of Turkey. We argue that this exclusionary and state-led urban renewal project is shaped around the ethnocratic state interests with limited real estate returns that aims to sanitize and dehistoricize the historic core of Diyarbakir given its political and socioeconomic significance for the Kurdish Movement. The rhetorical formation of a “renewed” historic core epitomizes the racialized governance that intensifies the race-class realities sitting at the center of the decades-old ethnic conflict in Turkey. The central government authority’s use of gentrification in practice illustrates the ethnocratic regime’s spatial, political, and economic repercussions for the Kurdish population as the country’s largest ethnic minority. Suriçi‘s redevelopment illustrates that ethnocratic regime practices coexist with a democratic façade and militarization activates an ethnocratic urban regime. Our findings contribute to the literature on space and power by illustrating the incompleteness and paradoxical elements of settler-colonial urbanism.
dc.description.numberOfPages17
dc.description.sponsorshipGeographisches Institut der Universität Bern (GIUB)
dc.identifier.doi10.48350/171279
dc.identifier.publisherDOI10.3389/frsc.2022.880812
dc.identifier.urihttps://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/202021
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherFrontiers Media S.A.
dc.relation.ispartofFrontiers in sustainable cities
dc.relation.issn2624-9634
dc.relation.organizationDCD5A442C062E17DE0405C82790C4DE2
dc.relation.organizationDCD5A442C062E17DE0405C82790C4DE2
dc.relation.organizationDCD5A442C199E17DE0405C82790C4DE2
dc.relation.organizationDCD5A442C77BE17DE0405C82790C4DE2
dc.subject.ddc900 - History::910 - Geography & travel
dc.titlePost-conflict Urban Renewal as an Ethnocratic Regime Practice: Racialized Governance of Redevelopment in Diyarbakir, Turkey
dc.typearticle
dspace.entity.typePublication
dspace.file.typetext
oaire.citation.volume4
oairecerif.author.affiliationGeographisches Institut der Universität Bern (GIUB)
unibe.contributor.rolecreator
unibe.contributor.rolecreator
unibe.date.licenseChanged2022-07-13 05:29:45
unibe.description.ispublishedpub
unibe.eprints.legacyId171279
unibe.refereedTRUE
unibe.subtype.articlejournal

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